I always said he didn’t do it, the evidence never added up, it was all circumstantial, and peppered with spurious and highly prejudiced and what’s more illogical statements about his mental state, his conviction amounted to little more than authorities pointing at the local crazy like a bunch of slack jawed yokels, and blaming all their ills on him or her, or in this case one particular ill, it was something akin to a witch trial. Now that it is all over we need to examine what may well be an institutionalized prejudice levied against the mentally ill, this is every bit as bad as institutionalized racism, and must be routed out.
I am writing about this having just heard it, so I apologize for the lack of witty title.
I am writing about this having just heard it, so I apologize for the lack of witty title.
5 comments:
I will have to study this case...
Save I can comment on the lack of quality understanding of those with mental challenges.
We had a man here in my little town in the midwest usa that was nearly beaten to death. His only crime being manic/depressive.
You can look him up on Google: "Edgar Richards" Kansas. I met him. He was in my anger management class, which was mostly a waste of time... with all due respect to the counselor.
Nuts... he needed one on one from an experienced psychiatrist and help to be admitted at a local care shelter.
But Kansas is still acts like a "hang em first" state. Wyatt Earp and Matt Dillon tactics still abound.
Just throw the dog a bone...
to much power makes you stupid
or it tends to atleast
Yes.... very. and concieted or even mentally unstable.
Yes most definitively.
or conceited... but i'm jus a kat. I cudz be rong bout dis.
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